Spanish lottery winners savour luck

THE winners of Spain's El Nino lottery have broken open champagne and wept for joy, savouring their luck all the more at a time when the country faces its most severe economic crisis in decades, with unemployment at a record 25 per cent.

"I feel great satisfaction, great joy, especially now when everyone is on such a limited budget. It's really a relief," one of the winners of the highest prize of 200,000 euros ($A250,000) said on TVE public television on Sunday.

"I have a son who is unemployed, and I will be able to help him with that and (pay for) my younger daughter's studies," another said.

El Nino, dubbed the "little sister" of the much bigger El Gordo Christmas jackpot, paid out 840 million euros this year.

The second prize was 100,000 euros. Each ticket cost 20 euros.

But for the first time, winners will have to pay 20 per cent tax on any sum exceeding 2500 euros under Spain's unprecedented austerity drive aimed at slashing the public deficit.

The tax took effect this year, so the top winners of 400,000 euros each in the El Gordo lottery, drawn on December 22, pocketed the full amount. El Gordo paid out a total of 2.466 billion euros.

The two lotteries are among the world's most generous, paying out 70 per cent of their takings.

The El Nino draw on January 6 - Epiphany or the 12th day of Christmas - is a tradition that began at the beginning of the 20th century.